dumpsterDiver
Banned
- Messages
- 9,003
- Reaction score
- 4,657
- # of dives
- 2500 - 4999
Wow, good post..What was the max depth?.. 30 feet ? .... and it scared the hell out of you... A good lesson about how quickly a dive accident can develop.
I had a friend diving solo with a heavy steel tank, no ditchable lead, minimal wetsuit and little body fat, jumped in, kicked down hard and found he had zero air at 30 feet, heavy and sinking fast.... He opted to kick as hard as possible and made it to the surface.. barely.. A guy with many hundreds of solo dives.. Said he almost blacked out from the exertion and low oxygen....
I've jumped in with my air turned off way too many times.. i've seen it happen many times....it is generally inexperienced divers.. or very experienced divers who become complacent, it is much more common than you would think.
I now dive a pony bottle for pretty much any dive, although they don't work either if you don't turn them on.
As for the guilt trip of inflating the BC and running for the surface..... That is pretty much what I would be doing too, especialy if it was on the descent.
My only real, underwater rescue was on a diver who made it to 70 feet with her tank turned off. When I got to her she was too panicked to even take a regulator from me. I shot both of us to the surface as fast as possible. 20 minutes later I was so shook up I was nearly in tears... I was more upset than the women I saved.
if you keep diving, you will collect more "dive stories" and hopefully they will all end as well.
I had a friend diving solo with a heavy steel tank, no ditchable lead, minimal wetsuit and little body fat, jumped in, kicked down hard and found he had zero air at 30 feet, heavy and sinking fast.... He opted to kick as hard as possible and made it to the surface.. barely.. A guy with many hundreds of solo dives.. Said he almost blacked out from the exertion and low oxygen....
I've jumped in with my air turned off way too many times.. i've seen it happen many times....it is generally inexperienced divers.. or very experienced divers who become complacent, it is much more common than you would think.
I now dive a pony bottle for pretty much any dive, although they don't work either if you don't turn them on.
As for the guilt trip of inflating the BC and running for the surface..... That is pretty much what I would be doing too, especialy if it was on the descent.
My only real, underwater rescue was on a diver who made it to 70 feet with her tank turned off. When I got to her she was too panicked to even take a regulator from me. I shot both of us to the surface as fast as possible. 20 minutes later I was so shook up I was nearly in tears... I was more upset than the women I saved.
if you keep diving, you will collect more "dive stories" and hopefully they will all end as well.